
By Mary Lynne Murray
Reprinted from Contra Costa Times, February 8, 2003
I'm setting
up a home office. How can I best manage paper?
Bottom line:
You can put every piece of paper, or the information on it, into
one of eight places:
1. Action files
2. Reference files
3. To-do list
4. Address book (little black book) or database
5. Calendar or PDA
6. To-sort tray
7. Tickler file
8. Circular file
The paper we keep falls into two categories: Action or Reference.
Action papers include those that need your attention. You need
to do something, either as soon as possible, or in the near future.
Examples of action files include:
– For
bills, orders, or donations. Payment coupon books belong here
too.
– Before
we can mail an article on, we need to copy it.
– When
writing a letter is the next action to take and can include greeting
cards, thank you notes, or business/personal letters.
–
This includes information that needs to be entered either in your
address book or computer database. It's an effective use of time
to group these entries and do a bunch together.
–
Often we can't take action before discussing something with a
spouse, child, service provider, or friend. To be effective managers
of paper requires communication with key people in our lives.
–
Small projects can be grouped in one file. For larger projects,
such as remodeling, keep separate files.
–
Much of what comes through the mail can be read quickly and sorted
for filing one time a week.
This is a starter list to which you can add. It's important to
customize your system.
– These are for information that you may need or want to
refer to in the future. Example of reference files are insurance,
specific hobbies, travel, car, gardening, etc. Research shows
that 80 percent of papers filed aren't used again. In a four-drawer
file cabinet that's almost three drawers of wasted space. Visualize
this to help you choose what paper to keep.
–
Your list is one consistent place to download your brain; to free
your mind from distractions. It will eliminate many scraps of
paper that tend to get lost. A to-do list provides satisfaction
of crossing it off (I like to mark it off with highlighter) when
completed. If you find you are not getting to something after
a week, check in with yourself to find out why. There may be another
action that you need to take first, or it may not be so important
after all, etc. Avoid putting large projects onto this list; instead
put the next single action needed to keep the project moving forward.
– For paper-based systems, write in pencil. It makes address
changes so much easier. If you've already started in pen, apply
a blank white address label over the previous numbers to provide
a fresh writing area.
– In practice, you can use a basket, box or space on a shelf,
table or desk. This container becomes a temporary spot for papers
you have not yet sorted -- the mail, papers given to you by family
members, papers from your brief case, papers from your doctor
appointment, receipts. Got "to sort" piles all over
the house? This is where a change in habit begins. Use one sorting
spot consistently and frequently. If the sorting tray is beginning
to house papers permanently, you need to sort more often.
–
This is another tool that eliminates scraps of paper from our
purses, desks, wallets and dresser tops. By entering the information
you need from the paper into your calendar (dentist appointment,
haircut) generally the paper can be tossed. A calendar is a freedom
tool because you don't have to clutter your mind with those details.
Use one calendar for your one life consistently and you will have
a greater success rate of being where you need to be.
–
This accordion type file has slots numbered 1-31 representing
the days of the month. This is the place to store tickets to the
game, play, concert, as well as directions, medical records and
bills, according to the event date or due date. Behind the daily
slots are more slots for each month, for long-term planning.
–
Who wants to spend Saturday afternoon when the sun is shining
sorting through old papers? If you can learn to toss unneeded
paper as you receive it, you will save yourself lots of hassles
and reach more of your goals in the process. Say "yes"
to the circular file by using it with enthusiasm. There's very
little paper that you can't live without.
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